http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2012/10/27/home-minister-defends-closure-aceh-churches.html


Home minister defends closure of Aceh churches
Bagus BT Saragih, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Headlines | Sat, October 27 2012, 
10:40 AM 
A- A A+ 
Paper Edition | Page: 2

Home Minister Gamawan Fauzi has defended the decision of the Aceh local 
administration to close down nine churches, saying the buildings do not have 
the required permits.

The closing of the churches had reportedly caused hundreds of Christians in the 
Aceh provincial capital to live in fear.

“It was a permit matter, so it’s actually not closures. I have talked to the 
Aceh governor [Zaini Abdullah] and he said that the permits were not issued 
because [the churches] failed to meet the requirements set by the joint 
ministerial decree,” Gamawan told the press at the Presidential Office on 
Thursday.

The minister was referring to the 2006 joint ministerial decree on the 
construction of houses of worship, which has stoked controversy because it was 
considered not to be in line with the spirit of religious tolerance.

“If [the churches] had managed to provide all the documents and met other 
requirements of the decree, the permits might have been issued. Just stick to 
the decree,” said Gamawan, who is also a former governor of West Sumatra.

“Besides, many of [the churches] were actually not buildings designated to be 
houses of worship. Some were houses utilized for religious services,” he added.

Gamawan’s statement came only one week after President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono 
underlined the importance of the roles played by leaders and religious figures 
in solving various conflicts taking place across the country.

“As the head of state, I invite and urge leaders and religious figures to guide 
people and apply their religious teachings as properly as possible,” he said in 
his speech at a commemorative ceremony celebrating the centenary of a Catholic 
church in Manggarai regency, East Nusa Tenggara (NTT), on Friday last week.

The President said that leaders and religious figures should continuously 
strive to seek peaceful solutions to various conflicts.

Yudhoyono, however, stopped short of mentioning any concrete steps needed to 
settle the various religious conflicts taking place in a number of areas 
throughout Indonesia. 

The Banda Aceh municipal administration has closed nine churches and five 
Buddhist temples across the city, with priests being reportedly forced to sign 
agreements stating they would close their churches following mounting pressure 
from local Muslims.

The congregations of the nine churches were advised to attend churches that had 
building permits, such as the Catholic Church, Western Indonesia Protestant 
Churches (GPIB) or Filadelfia Batak Protestant Churches (HKBP).

The closure of churches in Aceh has been going on for some time, which has 
raised concerns over growing intolerance that could lead to community conflicts.

In April this year, acting Aceh Singkil regent Razali AR ordered the closure of 
20 churches in a letter signed on April 30, which ordered members of the 
congregations to tear down the churches themselves by June 8, at the latest.

Aceh’s Christians are reportedly living in fear following the closure of nine 
churches in Banda Aceh over the past week.

Nico Tarigan, a priest at the Indonesia Bethel Church (GBI) Penau-yong, Banda 
Aceh, said he was afraid to hold mass because his side had signed an agreement 
with the Banda Aceh administration not to hold any religious activities as they 
had no permit to build a church. 

“We had to close down our church because the administration said that it 
violated city regulations. If we remained open, the officials said they could 
not guarantee our safety. Since we didn’t want to get hurt, we halfheartedly 
signed the agreement,” Nico said.

Nico said that he used the building for worship and prayer meetings.


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